William Bramley plays Fred Culligan, a hot dog vendor that complains to Malloy and Reed about non-customers parking in the parking lot of his hot dog stand. The officers explain to Culligan that he must have proper "customers only parking" signs on his lot. This is a repeat of Bramley's role from Log 131: Reed, the Dicks Have Their Jobs, and We Have Ours (1968) where he played Cullen, the owner of a hot dog joint that had non-customers filling up his parking lot. In that earlier appearance, Malloy and Reed had to make several trips to the stand to explain the proper signage regulations. It was the exact same building and parking lot, although there is an implication that Cullen and Culligan are supposed to be the same character, and that this hot dog stand is a different location in he having moved because of the parking problems at the former location.
Pete Malloy refers to himself and Jim Reed as 'Dick Tracy and Casey, crime photographer'.
The 67-68 gold Mustang with white vinyl top 'studio car' can be seen in the parking lot the second time Reed and Malloy stop at the hot dog stand.
Eric Shea portrays Gary Rogers. His real life younger brother, Stephen Shea, appeared earlier in the series in Log 141: The Color TV Bandit (1968) in an unrelated story-line.
One of the few instances when the police are seen using mobile radios, in this case Malloy in being "mobile" command lead.